Doug Kiker of ‘American Idol’ may have overdosed, report says

It is said that Douglas Kicker, a “lyrical garbage man” in the “American Idol” season, seemed bad enough before he was transferred to the hospital, one of the pedestrians who passed on the street decided to call the number 911.
Kicker died on March 10 at the Denver Health Center in Colorado, according to the representative of the Denver Medical Office of the Times on Friday in an email. He was transferred there on March 5 by ambulance from a few buildings east of City Center.
The caller said that before Kicker was taken to the hospital, he seemed to have an overdose TMZ. Sources outside the application of the law on the site said that Kicker was informally suffering from a heart attack caused by drugs.
However, “the cause and method of death are awaiting the investigation,” the authorities said on Friday.
The mobile man, Alaa, who got his title while singing while hanging from the daily garbage truck, who tested in the American Idol 18 season, and the left of the referees with his inherent nature and its raw talent. He got his ticket to Hollywood but was rejected, as many, during the first Hollywood tour.
Nevertheless, he returned to the competition for the final episode, where he performed a virtual performance of his test, “Bart the Broken Road”, with Rascal Flatts, the group that turned into the melody for the first time recorded by the bold dirt dirt in 2005. The band was singing together.
Wow! Kicker wrote On YouTube in May 2020. “A lot has happened since my first test. I am working to collect an album!”
Kicker, 32, was the father of two young girls with Valerie Cook. Sister Vet Evans, who published his speech on Wednesday afternoon on Facebook, later answered the people who asked about the help of the family.
“[A]This was completely unexpected, we are not fully prepared and we will need a little help to get it home from Denver Colorado and the ability to give the memorial that is not only but anyone who deserves, “Evans. He wrote Wednesday Night, people referred to Gofundme, which has since gained more than the required amount. She apologized for her delay in the response, saying, “Making an accusation to our minds, not our hearts.”